Scottish Daily Mail

Epidural won’t harm baby, mothers told

Study finds no impact on brain developmen­t

- By Victoria Allen Science Correspond­ent

HAVING an epidural during childbirth does not harm children’s developmen­t, a study has found.

Almost a third of women who give birth in the UK opt for an epidural, which makes labour less painful by stopping pain signals travelling from the spine to the brain.

Some experts have suggested using a local anaestheti­c to do this may have an effect on the developing brain of a baby.

But now a study of more than 435,000 British women and their children provides reassuranc­e.

Researcher­s found women who asked for an epidural had no additional risk of developmen­tal problems in their babies.

When their children were given the standard assessment at the age of two, no extra concerns were raised about their communicat­ion or ability to control their movements.

The study’s authors say the results may help women, stating: ‘This informatio­n may be used to aid decision-making for women considerin­g epidural analgesia in labour.’

The study, published in the journal JAMA Network Open, found women having their first child, those in a higher socioecono­mic group and those giving birth to a heavier baby were more likely to have an epidural. The choice to have the anaestheti­c is rarely made at random, the authors point out, with epidurals more likely where labour is long and painful.

Babies born to mothers who had an epidural were less likely to have a low ‘Apgar score’, which indicates poor health in a medical test.

Researcher­s also looked at whether they were more likely to need resuscitat­ion or had to go to a special baby unit.

At first it appeared that babies whose mothers had an epidural were slightly more likely to end up needing to go to a neonatal unit or help to breathe. But when the study took into account how they were born – by vaginal delivery or Caesarean section – the risk was no longer found to be higher.

Epidurals are usually safe for women, but do carry a small risk of side-effects and complicati­ons including low blood pressure, nausea, headaches, temporary loss of bladder control and nerve damage.

The ten-year study, which was carried out in Scotland, found that babies whose mothers who took the injection of anaestheti­c spent no extra days in hospital and had no more operations than other children in the following two years.

Andrew Shennan, professor of obstetrics at King’s College London, who was not involved in the research, said: ‘This confirms that epidurals are a safe choice for pain relief in labour and women should be reassured they will not cause adverse effects for their baby.’

‘Safe choice for pain relief’

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